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Inflation Report August 2017

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Presentation on theme: "Inflation Report August 2017"— Presentation transcript:

1 Inflation Report August 2017
Supply and the labour market

2 Chart 3.1 Growth in total hours worked has been robust over the past year
Contributions to four-quarter growth in total hours worked(a) Sources: Labour Force Survey and Bank calculations. (a) Diamond and light bars are Bank staff’s projections for 2017 Q2, based on data to May.

3 Chart 3.2 Unemployment is expected to have fallen slightly further in 2017 Q2
Unemployment rate and Bank staff’s near-term projection(a) (a) The beige diamonds show Bank staff’s central projections for the headline unemployment rate for the three months to March, April, May and June 2017, at the time of the May Report. The red diamonds show the current staff projections for the headline unemployment rate for the three months to June, July, August and September The bands on either side of the diamonds show uncertainty around those projections based on one root mean squared error of past Bank staff forecasts for the three-month headline unemployment rate.

4 Chart 3.3 Wage growth has remained subdued as the unemployment rate has fallen
Wage Phillips curve: wage growth and unemployment (a) Whole-economy average weekly earnings (AWE) total pay excluding bonuses and arrears of pay. Percentage changes on a year earlier. (b) Diamond for 2017 Q2 shows Bank staff’s projection, based on data to May.

5 Chart 3.4 Wage growth is expected to have remained subdued in 2017 Q2
Average weekly earnings: total and regular pay(a) (a) Diamonds show Bank staff’s projections for 2017 Q2, based on data to May. (b) Whole-economy total pay excluding bonuses and arrears of pay.

6 Chart 3.5 Employment intentions point to stable growth
Survey indicators of employment intentions(a) Sources: Bank of England, BCC, CBI, CBI/PwC, KPMG/REC/IHS Markit, ONS and Bank calculations. (a) Measures for the Bank’s Agents (manufacturing and services), the BCC (non-services and services) and CBI (manufacturing, financial services, business/consumer/professional services and distributive trades) are weighted together using employee job shares from Workforce Jobs. The REC data cover the whole economy. The BCC data are non seasonally adjusted. (b) Net percentage balance of companies expecting their workforce to increase over the next three months. (c) Last available observation for each quarter. The scores refer to companies’ employment intentions over the next six months. (d) Quarterly average. Recruitment agencies’ reports on the demand for staff placements compared with the previous month.

7 Chart 3.6 Average hours worked are expected to have been broadly stable in 2017 Q2
Average weekly hours worked: actual and usual Sources: Labour Force Survey and Bank calculations. (a) Usual hours exclude leave taken and other temporary variations in hours. Data are up to 2017 Q1. (b) Diamond shows Bank staff’s projection for 2017 Q2, based on data to May.

8 Chart 3.7 Involuntary part-time work remains elevated
People working part-time, as a proportion of total employment(a) Sources: Labour Force Survey and Bank calculations. (a) Percentage of LFS total employment. Rolling three-month measures. (b) As reported to the LFS.

9 Chart 3.8 The participation rate has been broadly stable in recent quarters
Labour force participation rate(a) Sources: Labour Force Survey and Bank calculations. (a) Percentage of 16+ population. The diamond shows Bank staff’s projection for 2017 Q2, based on data to May.

10 Chart 3.9 Productivity growth appears to have slowed in 2017 H1
Hourly labour productivity(a) (a) GDP is based on the backcast for the final estimate of GDP. The diamond shows Bank staff’s projection for 2017 Q2.

11 Chart 3.10 Real wages have grown broadly in line with productivity since 2008
Private sector real product wages and labour productivity(a) (a) The diamonds shows Bank staff’s projections for 2017 Q2. (b) Market sector output divided by private sector employment, based on the backcast for the final estimate of GDP. Employment data have been adjusted for reclassifications between public and private sector employment. (c) Average weekly earnings in the private sector divided by the market sector output deflator.

12 Chart 3.11 The labour share of income has fallen in recent quarters
Private sector labour share of income(a) (a) The labour share is based on total compensation of employees less general government compensation of employees, plus an estimate of self-employment income, divided by market sector output. Self-employment income is estimated from mixed income, assuming that the share of employment income in that is the same as the share of employee compensation in nominal GDP less mixed income. The diamond shows Bank staff’s projection for 2017 Q2.

13 Tables

14 Table 3.A Employment growth appears to have slowed in 2017 Q2
(a) Changes relative to the previous quarter. Figure for 2017 Q2 is Bank staff’s projection, based on data to May. (b) Other comprises unpaid family workers and those on government-supported training and employment programmes classified as being in employment.

15 Table 3.B Indicators suggest that the labour market has tightened further
Indicators of labour market tightness Sources: Bank of England, BCC, CBI, CBI/PwC, Labour Force Survey (LFS), ONS and Bank calculations. (a) Figures for 2017 Q2 are for the three months to May. (b) The number of people unemployed for more than twelve months divided by the economically active population. (c) Number of people reporting to the LFS that they are working part-time because they could not find a full-time job, as a percentage of LFS total employment. Rolling three-month measure. (d) Number of net additional hours that the currently employed report that they would like to work, on average, per week calculated from LFS microdata. Data are non seasonally adjusted. Calculation based on Bell, D and Blanchflower, D (2013), ‘How to measure underemployment?’, Peterson Institute for International Economics Working Paper No. 13–7. (e) Vacancies as a percentage of the workforce, calculated using rolling three-month measures. Excludes vacancies in agriculture, forestry and fishing. Figure for 2017 Q2 shows vacancies in the three months to June relative to the size of the labour force in the three months to May. (f) Redundancies as a percentage of total LFS employees, calculated using rolling three-month measures. (g) Measures for the Bank’s Agents (manufacturing and services), the BCC (non-services and services) and CBI (manufacturing, financial services and business/consumer/professional services) are weighted together using employee job shares from Workforce Jobs. The BCC data are non seasonally adjusted. Agents data are last available observation for each quarter. (h) The scores are on a scale of -5 to +5, with positive scores indicating greater recruitment difficulties in the most recent three months relative to normal. Last available observation for each quarter. (i) Percentage of respondents reporting recruitment difficulties over the past three months. (j) Balances of respondents expecting skilled or other labour to limit output/business over the next three months (in the manufacturing sector) or over the next twelve months (in the financial services and business/consumer/professional services sectors).

16 Table 3.C Monitoring the MPC’s key judgements

17 Table 3.D Most survey indicators of pay growth remain subdued
Sources: Bank of England, BCC, CBI, CBI/PwC, Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD), KPMG/REC/IHS Markit and Bank calculations. (a) Measures of expected pay for the year ahead. Produced by weighting together balances for manufacturing, distributive trades, business/consumer/professional services and financial services using employee job shares. Data only available since 2008. (b) Quarterly averages for manufacturing and services weighted together using employee job shares. The scores refer to companies’ labour costs over the past three months compared with the same period a year earlier. Scores of -5 to 5 represent rapidly falling and rapidly rising costs respectively, with zero representing no change. (c) Pay increase intentions excluding bonuses over the coming year. Data only available since 2012. (d) Net percentage balance of companies currently facing pressures to raise prices due to pay settlements. Produced by weighting together survey indices for pay settlements for services and non-services using employee job shares. (e) Produced by weighting together survey indices for the pay of permanent and temporary new placements using employee job shares; quarterly averages. A reading above 50 indicates growth on the previous month and those below 50 indicate a decrease.


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